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Effect of exposure of human monocyte derived macrophages to high, versus normal, glucose on subsequent lipid accumulation from glycated and acetylated low-density lipoproteins

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posted on 2024-11-01, 10:29 authored by Fatemeh Moheimani, Joanne Tan, Bronwyn Brown, Alison Heather, David van Reyk, Michael Davies
During atherosclerosis monocyte-derived macrophages accumulate cholesteryl esters from low-density lipoproteins (LDLs) via lectin-like oxidised LDL receptor-1 (LOX-1) and class AI and AII (SR-AI, SR-AII) and class B (SR-BI, CD36) scavenger receptors. Here we examined the hypothesis that hyperglycaemia may modulate receptor expression and hence lipid accumulation in macrophages. Human monocytes were matured into macrophages in 30 versus 5mM glucose and receptor expression and lipid accumulation quantified. High glucose elevated LOX1 mRNA, but decreased SR-AI, SR-BI, LDLR, and CD36 mRNA. SR-BI and CD36 protein levels were decreased. Normo- and hyperglycaemic cells accumulated cholesteryl esters from modified LDL to a greater extent than control LDL, but total and individual cholesteryl ester accumulation was not affected by glucose levels. It is concluded that, whilst macrophage scavenger receptor mRNA and protein levels can be modulated by high glucose, these are not key factors in lipid accumulation by human macrophages under the conditions examined.

History

Journal

Experimental Diabetes Research Journal

Volume

2011

Number

851280

Start page

1

End page

10

Total pages

10

Publisher

Hindawi Publishing Corporation

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

Copyright © 2011 Fatemeh Moheimani et al

Former Identifier

2006027276

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-01-16

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